NASA
Flight Pilot Edward H. White II During his Twenty-Minute Spacewalk in the Zero Gravity Over Hawaii, June 1965
Stamped 'NASA G-66-126' bottom left margin
Vintage chromogenic print on A Kodak paper
20.5 x 25.5 cm
Framed 43.5 x 47.5 cm
Framed 43.5 x 47.5 cm
Further images
Literature
During the Gemini 4 mission on June 3, 1965, Ed White became the first American to conduct a spacewalk. The spacewalk started at 3:45 p.m. EDT on the third orbit when White opened the hatch and used the hand-held manuevering oxygen-jet gun to push himself out of the capsule.The EVA started over the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii and lasted 23 minutes, ending over the Gulf of Mexico. Initially, White propelled himself to the end of the 8-meter tether and back to the spacecraft three times using the hand-held gun. After the first three minutes the fuel ran out and White maneuvered by twisting his body and pulling on the tether. In this photograph taken by Commander James McDivitt taken early in the EVA over a cloud-covered Pacific Ocean, the maneuvering gun is visible in White’s right hand. The visor of his helmet is gold-plated to protect him from the unfiltered rays of the sun.LIFE, 18 June 1965, cover
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC, September 1965, pp. 444-445.
Among the most powerful and recognisable images ever produced in space, this photograph appeared on the cover of LIFE magazine on 18 June 1965 and immediately entered visual history. Ed White is shown suspended above Earth, drifting freely over Texas, tethered to the Gemini IV spacecraft during the first extravehicular activity performed by an American astronaut.
The photograph was taken by mission commander James McDivitt with a NASA-modified Hasselblad 500C, using 70 mm Eastman Kodak Ektachrome MS film. Confined within the small Gemini capsule, McDivitt photographed under extreme physical and operational constraints, relying on intuition as much as technical skill. He later described the experience: "I took most of these photographs without being able to see what I was shooting at. I'd take the camera down and look to see where Ed was, and then put the camera up, point in that direction, and take the picture. I'm a good pistol and rifle shot. Maybe that helped." - Schick and Van Haaften, p. 33
White's EVA represented a critical breakthrough for the United States space program and a defining moment in the race for orbital mastery. Almost immediately after the mission's return, McDivitt's images circulated across the global press, powerfully demonstrating how photography had become instrumental in communicating - and cementing - humanity's entry into the space age.
[Original NASA caption for the photograph] "GT 4 EVA: Astronaut Edward H. White II, pilot for the Gemini-Titan 4 space mission, floats in space during the third revolution of the earth by the Gemini spacecraft. He is secured to the spacecraft by a 25-ft. umbilical line and a 23-ft. tether line. Both lines are wrapped in gold tape to form one cord. In his right hand, he carries a Hand-Held Self-Maneuvering Unit to aid in controlling his movements in space. The visor of his space helmet is gold-plated to protect him from unfiltered rays of the sun. A portion of the Gemini-4 spacecraft can be seen across the bottom of the picture. White spent 21 minutes in the zero-gravity of space."
Courtesy of Paul Stolper Gallery
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